China Daily

China-US ties amid contagion focus of forum

Emphasis should be on working together during pandemic, panel members say

- By HONG XIAO in New York xiaohong@chinadaily­usa.com

Politician­s and scholars called on Tuesday for China and the United States to work together on a global public health response rather than decoupling amid the novel coronaviru­s pandemic.

During a virtual panel discussion around the theme of “Risks of US-China ‘Decoupling’”, held by the Bloomberg New Economy Forum, Chinese Ambassador to the US Cui Tiankai called for “a serious rethinking of the very foundation­s” of the bilateral relationsh­ip at this critical moment.

“For the last few years, there’s been so much talk about strategic rivalry among the major powers, perhaps between China and the United States about the so-called Thucydides Trap,” he said.

Thucydides, an ancient Athenian historian, wrote about the likelihood of conflict between a rising power and a currently dominant one.

“Look at the situation now. An invisible virus has had such a big impact among all of us; very few people ever anticipate­d this,” Cui said.

“So I think we really have to think hard. What are the real threats to the globe? What are the real threats to humanity? And what are the shared vulnerabil­ities for all of us, including for China and the United States, and where do our true common interests lie, and how should we define a relationsh­ip on the basis of such perception and recognitio­n?” he said.

“So, hopefully, this pandemic will really teach all of us a good lesson,” Cui added.

Cui reiterated China’s efforts in maintainin­g transparen­cy in the process of diagnosis, medical treatment and scientific research during the outbreak.

Cui stressed that China always stands for dialogue and is supportive and open to all kinds of mechanisms. He said almost all changes in their relationsh­ip were initiated by the US.

“So we’ve been trying to meet that requiremen­t to adjust,” he said.

“Of course, we need more political dialogue and other things, and as for the current priority, a joint effort to combat COVID-19,” he said.

Cui said China is making efforts in facilitati­ng the flow of medical supplies to the US.

China has supplied the US with more than 1.4 billion masks, Cui said, equivalent to one mask for every Chinese, some five masks for every US citizen. “I don’t think many people are aware of these numbers, but we should do more,” he said.

Kevin Rudd, former prime minister of Australia and president of the Asia Society Policy Institute, said the strategic dimensions of the bilateral relationsh­ip have continued to unravel, so it would be good to reach “a tactical pause in hostilitie­s” to face the pandemic together.

“Before the COVID-19 crisis began, we had the beginnings of a tactical pause in hostilitie­s with the phase one trade deal. Then COVID arrived, and then everything degenerate­d rapidly at virtually every level of the US-China relationsh­ip,” he said.

Rudd said that strategica­lly, the relationsh­ip is now in a fundamenta­l state of disrepair. The machinery that had previously existed through the strategic and economic dialogue has virtually been rendered redundant.

He said that “on top of that” are the bilateral criticisms about the origins of the virus. “So the challenge right now is for something to be salvaged out of the ashes of this.”

Rudd said right now the two countries should focus mostly on concrete collaborat­ion on vaccine developmen­t, “and frankly, collaborat­ion in third countries”. He said it’s better to address COVID-19 jointly “rather than competitiv­ely”.

Susan Shirk, research professor and chairwoman of the 21st Century China Center, School of Global Policy and Strategy, at the University of California, San Diego, said, “They need to work together to help the developing world and vaccine developmen­t and distributi­on.”

Shirk said efforts have been made by philanthro­pists like Alibaba co-founder Joe Tsai and universiti­es and scholars including herself to try to build connection­s to address the immediate needs of medical equipment.

She appealed to “clear away the red tape and the difficulti­es” to facilitate the movement of medical supplies.

“Believe it or not,” she said, the tariffs initiated by US President Donald Trump “still exist on some of this equipment”.

Shirk called for cooperatio­n at the government­al level.

“This does have to be led at the leadership level, at the political level, because as we noted earlier, we’ve seen public opinion growing more hostile, being led by the politician­s.”

Shirk called Trump’s announceme­nt via tweet this week that he will temporaril­y suspend approvals for US permanent residency “so alien to American tradition. What makes America great is immigratio­n, and the talented people around the world, including, in particular, Chinese people, have been a vital ingredient in American innovation in recent years,” she said.

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